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Difference between revisions of "Glazier's Bench"

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Revision as of 03:35, 16 September 2015

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Glaziers Bench.png
Size 11x17
Where Compound




The Glazier's Bench is used to make various glass products, such as Glass Rods and Sheet Glass. It runs on Charcoal.

Consult the Glassmaking Guide or the section below (needs consolidation) for detailed strategies for using a Glazier's Bench.

Source

This building becomes available after you have learned the Glassblowing tech. Once built, anyone can make glass products regardless of skill.

Cost

Built in a Compound. Uses 11x17 cells.

Types of Glass

A Glazier's Bench has a reservoir that can hold up to 50 deben of molten glass. It must contain at least 20 in order to craft an item from that glass, regardless of how much the item will actually consume. This means that 19 deben of glass can never be used; it is a permanent minimum reservoir level. Fortunately, unused molten glass stays in the bench between uses, even after cooling (it re-melts the next time you heat the bench), so it is not necessary to fill the reservoir from scratch every time.

An individual bench can only contain one type of glass (soda, normal, or jewel) at a time. If you want to use a bench for a different type of glass, you must deliberately empty the reservoir and start over. Since this is so wasteful, it's generally more economical to build an additional Glazier's Bench for the new glass type instead.

The maximum amount of glass that can be held is 50 - if you attempt to load it with more than that, the materials will not be loaded, instead you are told "The crucible holds a maximum of 50 deben of glass."

Glass Type Melting Point Working Temp Ingredients
Soda Glass 3200° 1600–2400° 1 Lime, 2 Soda, 10 Sand
Normal Glass 3200° 1600–2400° 1 Lime, 2 Potash, 10 Sand
Jewel Glass 4400° 1600–2400° 1 Lime, 2 Potash, 10 White Sand

Related Pages

Use

From T3 - should probably rewrite and move to the Glassmaking guide page instead.

Using a Glazier's Bench (more detail)

Glazier's Benches use charcoal as fuel, and in order to melt and shape glass the bench must be heated by adding charcoal. While using the bench, the window will display the current temperature, as well as options to add 2, 6, or 12 charcoal.

Adding charcoal causes the temperature to increase over a period of about a minute -- the more charcoal added, the greater the increase. This is followed by another minute or so where the temperature stays constant, followed by a gradual cooling.

If charcoal is added while the bench is still in the "heating-up" phase from the last charcoal addition, this will trigger a dramatic spike in temperature. This can be a useful way to heat the bench quickly to its desired temperature. However, it is disastrous if it happens while creating an item (when the temperature must be kept within a certain range), as the spike in temperature will almost definitely ruin the item. Keeping the bench's temperature constant demands careful timing between charcoal additions.

Left alone, a bench will eventually begin cooling until its temperature returns to zero. It is not possible to speed up this cooling process. Items made on a bench cannot be taken out until the bench completely cools.

A more detailed model of glazier bench response may be found at Details


Glass Products

There are three types of glass. One of these combinations is heated to high temperature to produce melted glass of the desired type. The melted glass can later be formed to the various end products. It takes 1 deben of glass to create 1 item, except where noted otherwise.


Items that can be produced using soda glass

Items that can be produced using normal glass

Items that can be produced using jewel glass

Making a Mirror

Once you have obtained a Sheet Glass Fabrication skill of 7, you will receive a new menu entry, "Fuse silver powder to sheet glass".

A mirror is made in any glazier's bench regardless of the amount or type of glass. The bench has to be heated above 5000 degrees. To make a mirror you must have 200 Silver Powder and 1 Sheet Glass in your inventory. Sheet glasses in the bench do not count so you have to let the bench cooldown and take the sheet glass out before making a mirror. It takes 30 seconds for the silver powder to fuse to the glass to make a mirror.

Comments

Various glass products can be placed in a Glory Hole, and converted to advanced resources such as thermometers.

More discussion and operation details may be found in the Glassmaking Guide.

Pollution

Using this building will cause soot pollution to occur in roughly a 50 cord radius. Running controlled tests at an isolated compound, after running 46 debins of glass through (20 sheet glass, 26 glass jars on 2 benches), the soot level around the compound went from 0 to 6 right as the benches were cooling. Any area effected by soot will cause flax to yield nothing when harvested.

Glass Type Melting Point Working Temp Ingredients
Soda Glass 3200° 1600–2400° 1 Lime, 2 Soda, 10 Sand
Normal Glass 3200° 1600–2400° 1 Lime, 2 Potash, 10 Sand
Jewel Glass 4400° 1600–2400° 1 Lime, 2 Potash, 10 White Sand